Virtual Musical Advent Calendar, December 2 : Happy Xmas (War is Over)
Whenever I stop to think about it, that Happy Xmas (War Is Over) should become a modern holiday standard is something of a puzzler. It had, after all, so many things stacked against it:
First and foremost is title itself, which so defiantly refuses to put the Christ in Christmas. For his part, Lennon always claimed that it was never intended to be a song about Christmas, but instead a part of an anti-Vietnam War multimedia publicity campaign. (The song was written to be a tie-in with billboards Lennon and Ono had rented throughout the fall and winter of 1971, which read, “WAR IS OVER!!! If you want it. Happy Christmas, John & Yoko.”) Further, it wasn’t very popular when it was first released. It met with unfavorable reviews from critics and fans alike, and received little airplay. Largely because of this it was left off Some Time In New York City, the album Lennon and Ono were recording at the time. On top of everything else, Happy Xmas’s countermelody was provided in part by the shrill stylings of Ono, which are something of an acquired taste and have never exactly been a recipe for commercial success. (Though to be fair, she is joined quite ably by the children of the Harlem Community Choir.)
And yet despite all of this, the song has indeed become a Christmas standard. And it appears to have done so by taking the path that all those traditional carols based on folk songs have taken, which is to say that it’s popularity evolved organically, over time. Though no one seemed to care for it much when it was first released (including Lennon himself), by 1973 it was showing up in the Top 10 charts of several European countries, including Great Britain. It has since entered various charts another nine times over a forty-year period.
This is somewhat fitting, when you think about it, because Happy Xmas’s melody isn’t simply like a folk song that has evolved over time — it is one. Happy Xmas is itself the latest incarnation of the Irish-English folksong Stewball, which has roots back to the mid 18th century.
Though Lennon himself never credited Stewball, it is quite clearly the source from which the melody was pilfered. And if that sounds like a knock, know that it isn’t. All great artists pilfer from those who came before.Like most folksongs, Stewball’s melody itself was likely pilfered from bits of other previous tavern songs.
As inclusion in this Advent Calendar testifies, Happy Xmas is one of my perennial favorites from the season. For me, its power lies largely in the rather stunning effect of its mingling melody (“So this is Christmas, and what have you done…”), and countermelody (“War is over, if you want it…”). One can easily get lost in the former, the latter, or both together on any given listen. Even in times of peace, its message deeply resonates with me, thanks in no small part to the structural and melodic beauty of the piece.
There have been many, many covers of Happy Xmas over the past twenty years, from a disjointed mishmash of artists. The Alarm, Neil Diamond, Phantom Planet, Sarah Brightman, Jimmy Buffett, Jessica Simpson, Damien Rice, Andy Williams, Stephen Colbert and Wilco, and just about anyone else making Christmas albums since 1990 has taken a shot at Lennon’s classic. In the end, however, they all pale before the original. Unlike every other other modern or classic Christmas standard, Happy Xmas has yet to inspire even the tiniest spark of artistic originality from those that re-record it. There is really no variation in the other artists’ covers; not a one of the myriad of those covering the title seems to have any interest in tinkering with it enough to make it their own. Ultimately, each cover of Happy Xmas sounds like a tepid, watered-down, karaoke version of the original. Perhaps it’s because Lennon’s intimidating shadow still looms too large; perhaps Happy Xmas simply isn’t yet old and stale enough to force a new generation of artists to push at its bounderies. Whatever the reason, the covers all stink.
Which, I suppose, is just fine by me. The original is sublime and transcendent. For now, it is enough.
The Virtual Musical Advent Calendar
December 1 — God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen
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The part of the song that sticks with me is where they begin with a standard (boilerplate!) greeting of “A very Merry Christmas and a happy New Year” and then Lennon gets wry and sad and honest with the next part “Let’s hope it’s a good one without any fear”.
It’s a Christmas song for a rough year… and, sometimes, you have rough years.Report
Also, not a lot of Christina carols omit Jesus but mention Rama and Krishna.Report
Nothing to add other than that I’m totally digging the Advent calendar.Report